NEC Lighting has produced a union ‘twixt wireless speaker and LED ceiling light that’s controllable with an Android phone. You can rock out to your favorite tunes over Bluetooth at the same you play with the brightness and color temperature of the light. Or you can switch to one of three presets that offer active, natural or relaxed light and sound to permeate your living room. The company’s hoping to have it perfected in time for the end of this year and if your imagination can’t stretch to picture a singing light fitting, then head on past the break to see it in action.

January saw the release of the first ever Humble Bundle for Android, and now the organization is back with a first of another sort for the platform — five of them, in fact. The second mobile-focused Humble Bundle sees five games making their Android debut, including iPhone favorite Canabalt (now with a two-player mode and Android-exclusive 3D option), plus Zen Bound 2, Cogs, Swords and Soldiers and Avadon: The Black Fortress HD (the latter specific to Android tablets). Along with those comes a beta version of Humble Bundle’s own app (up from an alpha release before), which makes it a bit easier to download the games and check for updates since all of this is handled outside of Google Play. As with all Humble Bundles, you can set your own price for the bundle, with an amount of your choosing going to the Child’s Play charity and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and you’ll also get desktop versions of all five games for Windows, Mac and Linux. A Steam key is included with all purchases over $1 as well (although it doesn’t yet include Canabalt), and they’ve even thrown in soundtracks for three of the games for good measure.

If unnamed “internal sources” at Sprint are to be believed, then HTC’s new flagship phone is set to become one of the Now Network’s first LTE handsets as soon as June 10th. The only sticking point, beyond us having no notion of whether these sources are credible, is that they didn’t use the right name for the phone — calling it the “HTC Jet” instead of the One X. Despite this switched moniker, S4GRU reports that all the leaked specs match up perfectly with the LTE variant of the One X, including a dual-core 1.5GHz Qualcomm S4 processor (Tegra 3 being reserved for non-LTE version in other markets), 4.7-inch 1280 x 720 SLCD display, 1GB RAM, NFC, Gorilla Glass 2 and a polycarbonate unibody. As for the branding, ‘Jet’ would surely be a disposable codename, replacing the earlier Endeavor disguise, otherwise HTC’s fresh start has already taken a hit.

An unnamed Samsung exec hinted to the Korea Times that its upcoming flagship, the Galaxy S III, will include a next-gen quad-core Exynos chip that will incorporate LTE and WCDMA radios. Of course, such a revelation shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise since both its predecessors were built around home grown silicon… at least originally. According to the source, Sammy is trying to become more self reliant and distance itself from Qualcomm which has provided single-chip solutions for a number of the manufacturer’s high-end handsets. The new AP appears to be the 32nm slab of silicon we heard about before MWC, which is sporting four A9 cores and not the more powerful A15. The executive said the development of the all-in-one chip is complete and its simply a matter of sticking them inside smartphones. Now, when exactly we can hope to see such a device hit the market is still a bit of a mystery.

Motorola has apparently bored itself with battery expansion and moved onto that other mobile upgrade chestnut; screen size. Posted on the Mfunz forums, we’re apparently gazing upon a 4.6-inch high-definition display — one that dwarfs the existing RAZR model on its right. We don’t know much more just yet, although the apparent Verizon badging suggests this new phone is US-bound. This could be the first peak at the rumored Droid Fighter — a name that’s bounced around the web recently on supposedly leaked Verizon documents with a mid-April release date in tow. We’re not sure what else to expect from this device, aside from what looks likely to be software-based buttons like those found on the Galaxy Nexus. We wouldn’t refuse a Moto device with Ice Cream Sandwich from launch — it’ll beat waiting (and waiting) on those OTA updates.

The only thing worse than the Terrible 10,000 Feet is the underlying sense that it’s all so unnecessary. Why should using an iPad, Kindle or bag-holding alarm clock be banned during take-off and landing, even with all wireless comms switched off? Nick Bilton from the New York Times has been hounding the Federal Aviation Administration over this issue for a while, but he’s suddenly received a reply other than “Just turn it off, sir.” A senior official told him that the agency as decided to take a “fresh look” at the rules, not for cell phones, but for the myriad of other gadgets that can make a flight so much more peaceful and productive. Currently, airlines complain that they have to test each model of device individually, on every single plane in the fleet, and with a separate empty flight used for each test, before they’re allowed to relax the rules for that model. That’s why personal electronic devices remain so closely restricted, but also why there’s so much room for a smarter solution — even if there are still reams of red-tape to overcome before anything changes.

Remember NetZero? Today the company announced that it’s launching NetZero 4G Mobile Broadband, a wireless service rolling out in 80 US cities and offering value-priced monthly data plans without activation fees, contracts, commitments or overage charges. Customers can chose between two levels of service — Lightspeed (up to 1Mbps down / 384Kbps up) to conserve data and Warpspeed (up to 10Mbps down / 1.5Mbps up) for maximum performance — and can switch back and forth by simply logging into NetZero’s website (this can take up to 15 minutes). Five monthly data plans are available:

Free, $0, 200MB (limited to Lightspeed and limited to one year)

Basic, $9.95, 500MB (limited to Lightspeed)

Plus, $19.95, 1GB

Pro, $34.95, 2GB

Platinum, $49.95, 4GB

Two devices are offered — the NetZero 4G Stick ($49.95 + shipping) is a Windows and OS X-compatible USB modem and the NetZero 4G Hotspot ($99.95 + shipping) is an eight device-capable WiFi hotspot with an LCD and a 2,200mAh battery.

So far, so good — NetZero is becoming an MVNO. Yet strangely, there’s no mention in any of the PR as to which network the company is using. We test drove NetZero’s new wireless service over the weekend using the WiFi hotspot and figured out that it’s using Clearwire’s WiMAX network. In fact NetZero’s 4G Stick is identical to the Clear 4G Mobile USB modem (manufactured by Ubee), and its 4G Hotspot is the same as the Clear Spot Apollo (a rather bulky unit made by Gemtek)– see the FCC links below and read on for our impressions after the break.

China is getting even closer to its first taste of Nokia Windows Phone and it might include a new phone entirely. While we’re still two weeks away from Mr. Elop’s proposed March 28th launch, the leaked shot above is purported to be the Lumia 719c — a previously unseen Windows Phone that could arrive in time for Nokia’s latest smartphone push. It has that familiar curved shape and plastic build, but there’s some slight design riffs to set it apart from both the Lumia 710 and 610 — one of which it’ll likely replace in Chinese stores. We only have Mr. Blurrycam’s one-shot portrait to go on so far, but expect to see some price-constrained specs like those seen on Nokia’s other entry-level smartphone when (or if) it gets an official reveal.

The latest refresh of the Linux kernel, 3.3, is now available, and the second release of 2012 brings with it the long-awaited merging of code from Google’s little side project. While that is particularly interesting to developers looking to boot Android or run apps on the stock Linux kernel (FYI: optimized power management and other infrastructure that didn’t make it this time will arrive in the next release, 3.4) and represents a resolution to the issues that kept the two apart for so long it’s not the only new feature included. There are improvements to file systems like Btrfs, memory management, networking, security and much, much more. Hit the source link below for the full changelog or grab the code and from the usual locations and get your compile on directly.

Your smartphone and / or tablet is just begging for an update. From time to time, these mobile devices are blessed with maintenance refreshes, bug fixes, custom ROMs and anything in between, and so many of them are floating around that it’s easy for a sizable chunk to get lost in the mix. To make sure they don’t escape without notice, we’ve gathered every possible update, hack, and other miscellaneous tomfoolery we could find during the last week and crammed them into one convenient roundup. If you find something available for your device, please give us a shout at tips at engadget dawt com and let us know. Enjoy!